首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 29 毫秒
1.
2.
Summary One allele at each of the five nit loci in Neurospora crassa together with the wild type strain have been compared on various nitrogen sources with regard to (i) their growth characteristics (ii) the level of nitrate reductase and its associated activities (reduced benzyl viologen nitrate reductase and cytochrome c reductase) (iii) the level of nitrite reductase and (iv) their ability to take up nitrite from the surrounding medium. Results are consistent with the hypothesis that nit-3 is the structural gene for nitrate reductase, nit-1 specifies in part a molybdenum containing moiety which is responsible for the nit-3 gene product dimerising to form nitrate reductase, nit-4 and nit-5 are regulator genes whose products are involved in the induction of both nitrate reductase and nitrite reductase and nit-2 codes for a generalised ammonium activated repressor protein. Studies on the induction of nitrate reductase (and its associated activities) and nitrite reductase in wild type, nit-1 and nit-3 in the presence of either nitrate or nitrite suggest that each enzyme may be regulated independently of the other and that nitrite could be true co-inducer of the assimilatory pathway. Nitrite uptake experiments with nit-2, nit-4 and nit-5 strains show that whereas nit-4 and nit-5 are freely permeable to this molecule, it is unable to enter the nit-2 mycelium.  相似文献   

3.
Summary Spontaneous chlorate-resistant (CR) mutants have been isolated from Chlamydomonas reinhardtii wildtype strains. Most of them, 244, were able to grow on nitrate minimal medium, but 23 were not. Genetic and in vivo complementation analyses of this latter group of mutants indicated that they were defective either at the regulatory locus nit-2, or at the nitrate reductase (NR) locus nit-1, or at very closely linked loci. Some of these nit-1 or nit-2 mutants were also defective in pathways not directly related to nitrate assimilation, such as those of amino acids and purines. Chlorate treatment of wild-type cells resulted in both a decrease in cell survival and an increase in mutant cells resistant to a number of different chemicals (chlorate, methylammonium, sulphanilamide, arsenate, and streptomycin). The toxic and mutagenic effects of chlorate in minimal medium were not found when cells were grown either in darkness or in the presence of ammonium, conditions under which nitrate uptake is drastically inhibited. Chlorate was also able to induce reversion of nit mutants of C. reinhardtii, but failed to produce His + revertants or Arar mutants in the BA-13 strain of Salmonella typhimurium. In contrast, chlorate treatment induced mutagenesis in strain E1F1 of the phototrophic bacterium Rhodobacter capsulatus. Genetic analyses of nitrate reductase-deficient CR mutants of C. reinhardtii revealed two types of CR, to low (1.5 mM) and high (15 mM) chlorate concentrations. These two traits were recessive in heterozygous diploids and segregated in genetic crosses independently of each other and of the nit-1 and nit-2 loci. Three her loci and four lcr loci mediating resistance to high (HC) and low (LC) concentrations of chlorate were identified. Mutations at the nit-2 locus, and deletions of a putative locus for nitrate transport were always epistatic to mutations responsible for resistance to either LC or HC. In both nit + and nit chlorate-sensitive (CS) strains, nitrate and nitrite gave protection from the toxic effect of chlorate. Our data indicate that in C. reinhardtii chlorate toxicity is primarily dependent on the nitrate transport system and independent of the existence of an active NR enzyme. At least seven loci unrelated to the nitrate assimilation pathway and mediating CR are thought to control indirectly the efficiency of the nitrate transporter for chlorate transport. In addition, chlorate appears to be a mutagen capable of inducing a wide range of mutations unrelated to the nitrate assimilation pathway.  相似文献   

4.
5.
Summary The nitrate assimilatory pathway in Neurospora crassa is composed of two enzymes, nitrate reductase and nitrite reductase. Both are 2type homodimers. Enzymebound prosthetic groups mediate the electron transfer reactions which reduce inorganic nitrate to an organically utilizable form, ammonium. One, a molybdenum-containing cofactor, is required by nitrate reductase for both enzyme activity and holoenzyme assembly. Three modes of regulation are imposed on the expression of nitrate assimilation, namely: nitrogen metabolite repression, nitrate induction and autogenous regulation by nitrate reductase. In this study, nitrocellulose blots of sodium dodecyl sulphate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) resolved proteins from crude extracts of the wild type and specific nitrate-nonutilizing (nit) mutants were examined for material cross-reactive with antibodies against nitrate reductase and nitrite reductase. The polyclonal antibody preparations used were rendered monospecific by reverse affinity chromatography. Growth conditions which alter the regulatory response of the organism were selected such that new insight could be made into the complex nature of the regulation imposed on this pathway. The results indicate that although nitrate reductase and nitrite reductase are coordinately expressed under specific nutritional conditions, the enzymes are differentially responsive to the regulatory signals.  相似文献   

6.
Summary Further evidence supports the hypothesis that nitrate reductase and xanthine dehydrogenase are molybdo-enzymes inAspergillus nidulans, probably sharing a molybdenum-containing cofactor. This evidence includes (1) five-fold greater toxicity of tungstate on nitrate and hypoxanthine than on other nitrogen sources, (2) locus-specific molybdate reparability of both nitrate reductase and xanthine dehydrogenase at one (cnxE) of five (cnx) loci where mutation can result in pleiotropic loss of both enzyme activities, and (3) an additional class of mutants (molB) which are both molybdate resistant and partially defective in utilization of nitrate and hypoxanthine as nitrogen sources. Moreover, the phenotypes on molybdate-containing media of various mutants altered in the regulation of nitrate reductase synthesis and the ability of nitrate to protect against molybdate toxicity suggest that incorporation of molybdenum into nitrate reductase or into something having the same control properties as nitrate reductase can detoxify molybdate. However, mutations affecting regulation of xanthine dehydrogenase synthesis do not affect growth responses to molybdate. The properties of another class of molybdate resistance mutations (molA) suggest that there is another nitrate-inducible intracellular molybdate detoxification mechanism in addition to the one having identical control properties to nitrate reductase.  相似文献   

7.
Environmental factors, such as ultraviolet‐B (UV‐B) irradiation, have the ability to affect pathways such as nitrogen metabolism. As fixed nitrogen is the keystone mineral nutrient that controls grain crop yield, any alteration in this cycle can be detrimental to plant productivity. Nitrate reductase enzyme activity is responsible for the reduction of nitrate to nitrite, and nitrate is the major form of nitrogen assimilated in plants. In maize (Zea mays L.) production, nitrate assimilation kinetics are important for both high‐ and low‐input agricultural systems. Nitrate reductase protein activity is controlled by phosphatases and kinases. Nitrate reductase activity is responsive to environmental signals such as light–dark cycles and UV‐B radiation, although the regulatory controls are not yet fully understood. We have determined the location of maize genetic factors that control nitrate reductase activity and the extent of contribution of each of these factors, both locally in the leaf tissue and via long‐distance signaling loci that affect root nitrate reductase activity upon leaf UV irradiation. In the IBM94 recombinant inbred mapping population, the loci controlling regulation of nitrate reductase activity under UV‐B map to different positions than the loci controlling nitrate reductase activity in unexposed plants.  相似文献   

8.
Summary Eighteen mutant strains of the unicellular cyanobacterium Anacystis nidulans R2 that are unable to assimilate nitrate have been isolated after transposon Tn901 mutagenesis. Characterization of phenotypes and transformation tests have allowed the distinction of five different mutant types. The mutants exhibiting a nitrate reductase-less phenotype were identified as being affected in previously defined loci, as they could be transformed to the wild type by one of the plasmids pNR12, pNR63 or pNR193, which contain cloned genes of A. nidulans R2 involved in nitrate reduction. The mutations in strains FM2 and FM16 appear to affect two other genes involved in nitrate assimilation. Strain FM2 apparently bears a single mutation which results in both lack of nitrite reductase activity and loss of ammonium-promoted repression of nitrate reductase synthesis. FM16 has a low but significant level of nitrate reductase that is also freed from repression by ammonium, and an increased level of nitrite reductase activity. FM16 exhibited properties which indicate that this mutant strain might also be affected in the transport of nitrate into the cell.Abbreviations EDTA ethylenediamine-tetraacetic acid - MTA mixed alkyltrimethylammonium bromide - TES N-tris (hydroxymethyl)methyl-2-aminoethane sulfonic acid - Tricine N-[2-hydroxy-1,1-bis (hydroxymethyl)ethyl]-glycine - Tris Tris(hydroxymethyl)aminomethane  相似文献   

9.
Plasmid DNA carrying either the nitrate reductase (NR) gene or the argininosuccinate lyase gene as selectable markers and the correspondingChlamydomonas reinhardtii mutants as recipient strains have been used to isolate regulatory mutants for nitrate assimilation by insertional mutagenesis. Identification of putative regulatory mutants was based on their chlorate sensitivity in the presence of ammonium. Among 8975 transformants, two mutants, N1 and T1, were obtained. Genetic characterization of these mutants indicated that they carry recessive mutations at two different loci, namedNrg1 andNrg2. The mutation in N1 was shown to be linked to the plasmid insertion. Two copies of the nitrate reductase plasmid, one of them truncated, were inserted in the N1 genome in inverse orientation. In addition to the chlorate sensitivity phenotype in the presence of ammonium, these mutants expressed NR, nitrite reductase and nitrate transport activities in ammonium-nitrate media. Kinetic constants for ammonium (14C-methylammonium) transport, as well as enzymatic activities related to the ammonium-regulated metabolic pathway for xanthine utilization, were not affected in these strains. The data strongly suggest thatNrg1 andNrg2 are regulatory genes which specifically mediate the negative control exerted by ammonium on the nitrate assimilation pathway inC. reinhardtii.  相似文献   

10.
E. Fernández  J. Cárdenas 《Planta》1981,153(3):254-257
Wild-type Chlamydomonas reinhardii cells have xanthine dehydrogenase activity when grown with nitrate, nitrite, urea, or amino acid media. Mutant strains 102, 104, and 307 of Chlamydomonas, lacking both xanthine dehydrogenase and nitrate reductase activities, were incapable of restoring the NADPH-nitrate reductase activity of the mutant nit-1 of Neurospora crassa, whereas wild type cells and mutants 203 and 305 had xanthine dehydrogenase and were able to reconstitute the nitrate reductase activity of nit-1 of Neurospora. Therefore, it is concluded that in Chlamydomonas a common cofactor is shared by xanthine dehydrogenase and nitrate reductase. Xanthine dehydrogenase is repressed by ammonia and seems to be inessential for growth of Chlamydomonas.  相似文献   

11.
Summary The nit-3 gene of the filamentous fungus Neurospora crassa encodes the enzyme nitrate reductase, which catalyzes the first reductive step in the highly regulated nitrate assimilatory pathway. The nucleotide sequence of nit-3 was determined and translates to a protein of 982 amino acid residues with a molecular weight of approximately 108 kDa. Comparison of the deduced nit-3 protein sequence with the nitrate reductase protein sequences of other fungi and higher plants revealed that a significant amount of homology exists, particularly within the three cofactor-binding domains for molybdenum, heme and FAD. The synthesis and turnover of the nit-3 mRNA were also examined and found to occur rapidly and efficiently under changing metabolic conditions.  相似文献   

12.
The isolation and characterization of mutants altered for nitrate assimilation in Neurospora crassa is described. The mutants isolated can be subdivided into five classes on the basis of growth tests that correspond to the growth patterns of existing mutants at six distinct loci. Mutants with growth characteristics like those of nit-2, nit-3 and nit-6 are assigned to those loci on the basis of noncomplementation and lack of recombination. Mutants that, from their growth patterns, appear to lack the molybdenum-containing co-factor for both nitrate reductase and xanthine dehydrogenase subdivide into three loci (nit-7, nit-8 and nit-9), all of which are genetically distinct from nit-1. nit-9 is a complex locus consisting of three complementation groups and thus appears similar to the cnxABC locus of Asperillus nidulans. Extensive complementational and recombinational analyses reveal that nit-4 and nit-5 are alleles of the same locus, and two new alleles of that locus have been isolated. The results indicate that, as in A. nidulans, nitrate assimilation in N. crassa requires at least four loci (nit-1, 7, 8 and 9) to produce the molybdenum co-factor for nitrate reductase (and xanthine dehydrogenase), one locus (nit-3) to code for the nitrate reductase apoprotein, one locus (nit-6) to code for the nitrite reductase approtein and only one locus (nit-4/5) for the regulation of induction of the pathway by nitrate and nitrite.  相似文献   

13.
1. In Aspergillus nidulans nitrate and nitrite induce nitrate reductase, nitrite reductase and hydroxylamine reductase, and ammonium represses the three enzymes. 2. Nitrate reductase can donate electrons to a wide variety of acceptors in addition to nitrate. These artificial acceptors include benzyl viologen, 2-(p-iodophenyl)-3-(p-nitrophenyl)-5-phenyltetrazolium chloride, cytochrome c and potassium ferricyanide. Similarly nitrite reductase and hydroxylamine reductase (which are possibly a single enzyme in A. nidulans) can donate electrons to these same artificial acceptors in addition to the substrates nitrite and hydroxylamine. 3. Nitrate reductase can accept electrons from reduced benzyl viologen in place of the natural donor NADPH. The NADPH-nitrate-reductase activity is about twice that of reduced benzyl viologen-nitrate reductase under comparable conditions. 4. Mutants at six gene loci are known that cannot utilize nitrate and lack nitrate-reductase activity. Most mutants in these loci are constitutive for nitrite reductase, hydroxylamine reductase and all the nitrate-induced NADPH-diaphorase activities. It is argued that mutants that lack nitrate-reductase activity are constitutive for the enzymes of the nitrate-reduction pathway because the functional nitrate-reductase molecule is a component of the regulatory system of the pathway. 5. Mutants are known at two gene loci, niiA and niiB, that cannot utilize nitrite and lack nitrite-reductase and hydroxylamine-reductase activities. 6. Mutants at the niiA locus possess inducible nitrate reductase and lack nitrite-reductase and hydroxylamine-reductase activities. It is suggested that a single enzyme protein is responsible for the reduction of nitrite to ammonium in A. nidulans and that the niiA locus is the structural gene for this enzyme. 7. Mutants at the niiB locus lack nitrate-reductase, nitrite-reductase and hydroxylamine-reductase activities. It is argued that the niiB gene is a regulator gene whose product is necessary for the induction of the nitrate-utilization pathway. The niiB mutants either lack or produce an incorrect product and consequently cannot be induced. 8. Mutants at the niiribo locus cannot utilize nitrate or nitrite unless provided with a flavine supplement. When grown in the absence of a flavine supplement the activities of some of the nitrate-induced enzymes are subnormal. 9. The growth and enzyme characteristics of a total of 123 mutants involving nine different genes indicate that nitrate is reduced to ammonium. Only two possible structural genes for enzymes concerned with nitrate utilization are known. This suggests that only two enzymes, one for the reduction of nitrate to nitrite, the other for the reduction of nitrite to ammonium, are involved in this pathway.  相似文献   

14.
Extracts of Aspergillus nidulans wild type (bi-1) and the nitrate reductase mutant niaD-17 were active in the in vitro restoration of NADPH-dependent nitrate reductase when mixed with extracts of Neurospora crassa, nit-1. Among the A. nidulans cnx nitrate reductase mutants tested, only the molybdenum repair mutant, cnxE-14 grown in the presence of 10−3 M Na2MoO4 was active in the restoration assay.Aspergillus extracts contained an inhibitor(s) which was measured by the decrease in NADPH-dependent nitrate reductase formed when extracts of Rhodospirillum rubrum and N. crassa, nit-1 were incubated at room temperature. The inhibition by extracts of A. nidulans, bi-1, cnxG-4 and cnxH-3 was a linear function of time and a logarithmic function of the protein concentration in the extract.The molybdenum content of N. crassa wild type and nit-1 mycelia were found to be similar, containing approx. 10 μg molybdenum/mg dry mycelium. The NADPH-dependent cytochrome c reductase associated with nitrate reductase was purified from both strains. The enzyme purified from wild-type N. crassa contained more than 1 mol of molybdenum per mol of enzyme, whereas the enzyme purified from nit-1 contained negligible amounts of molybdenum.  相似文献   

15.
Abstract. The application of molecular approaches such as mutant analysis and recombinant DNA technology, in conjunction with immunology, are set to revolutionize our understanding of the nitrate assimilation pathway. Mutant analysis has already led to the identification of genetic loci encoding a functional nitrate reduction step and is expected to lead ultimately to the identification of genes encoding nitrate uptake and nitrite reduction. Of particular significance would be identification of genes whose products contribute to regulatory networks controlling nitrogen metabolism. Recombinant DNA techniques are particularly powerful and have already allowed the molecular cloning of the genes encoding the apoprotein of nitrate reductase and nitrite reductase. These successes allow for the first lime the possibility to study directly the role of environmental factors such as type of nitrogen source (NO3 or NH4+) available to the plant, light, temperature water potential and CO2 and O2 tensions on nitrate assimilation gene expression and its regulation at the molecular level. This is an important advance since our current understanding of the regulation of nitrate assimilation is based largely on changes of activity of the component steps. The availability of mutants, cloned genes, and gene transfer systems will permit attempts to manipulate the nitrate assimilation pathway.  相似文献   

16.
Summary It had previously been held that chlorate is not itself toxic, but is rendered toxic as a result of nitrate reductase-catalysed conversion to chlorite. This however cannot be the explanation of chlorate toxicity in Aspergillus nidulans, even though nitrate reductase is known to have chlorate reductase activity. Among other evidence against the classical theory for the mechanism of chlorate toxicity, is the finding that not all mutants lacking nitrate reductase are clorate resistant. Both chlorate-sensitive and resistant mutants lacking nitrate reductase, also lack chlorate reductase. Data is presented which implicates not only nitrate reductase but also the product of the nirA gene, a positive regulator gene for nitrate assimilation, in the mediation of chlorate toxicity. Alternative mechanisms for chlorate toxicity are considered. It is unlikely that chlorate toxicity results from the involvement of nitrate reductase and the nirA gene product in the regulation either of nitrite reductase, or of the pentose phosphate pathway. Although low pH has an effect similar to chlorate, chlorate is not likely to be toxic because it lowers the pH; low pH and chlorate may instead have similar effects. A possible explanation for chlorate toxicity is that it mimics nitrate in mediating, via nitrate reductase and the nirA gene product, a shut-down of nitrogen catabolism. As chlorate cannot act as a nitrogen source, nitrogen starvation ensures.  相似文献   

17.
Summary Six mutant strains (301, 102, 203, 104, 305, and 307) affected in their nitrate assimilation capability and their corresponding parental wild-type strains (6145c and 21gr) from Chlamydomonas reinhardii have been studied on different nitrogen sources with respect to NAD(P)H-nitrate reductase and its associated activities (NAD(P)H-cytochrome c reductase and reduced benzyl viologen-nitrate reductase) and to nitrite reductase activity. The mutant strains lack NAD(P)H-nitrate reductase activity in all the nitrogen sources. Mutants 301, 102, 104, and 307 have only NAD(P)H-cytochrome c reductase activity whereas mutant 305 solely has reduced benzyl viologen-nitrate reductase activity. Both activities are repressible by ammonia but, in contrast to the nitrate reductase complex of wild-type strains, require neither nitrate nor nitrite for their induction. Moreover, the enzyme from mutant 305 is always obtained in active form whereas nitrate reductase from wild-types needs to be reactivated previously with ferricyanide to be fully detected. Wild-type strains and mutants 301, 102, 104, and 307, when properly induced, exhibit an NAD(P)H-cytochrome c reductase distinguishable electrophoretically from contitutive diaphorases as a rapidly migrating band. Nitrite reductase from wild-type and mutant strains is also repressible by ammonia and does not require nitrate or nitrite for its synthesis. These facts are explained in terms of a regulation of nitrate reductase synthesis by the enzyme itself.  相似文献   

18.
Plasmid DNA carrying either the nitrate reductase (NR) gene or the argininosuccinate lyase gene as selectable markers and the correspondingChlamydomonas reinhardtii mutants as recipient strains have been used to isolate regulatory mutants for nitrate assimilation by insertional mutagenesis. Identification of putative regulatory mutants was based on their chlorate sensitivity in the presence of ammonium. Among 8975 transformants, two mutants, N1 and T1, were obtained. Genetic characterization of these mutants indicated that they carry recessive mutations at two different loci, namedNrg1 andNrg2. The mutation in N1 was shown to be linked to the plasmid insertion. Two copies of the nitrate reductase plasmid, one of them truncated, were inserted in the N1 genome in inverse orientation. In addition to the chlorate sensitivity phenotype in the presence of ammonium, these mutants expressed NR, nitrite reductase and nitrate transport activities in ammonium-nitrate media. Kinetic constants for ammonium (14C-methylammonium) transport, as well as enzymatic activities related to the ammonium-regulated metabolic pathway for xanthine utilization, were not affected in these strains. The data strongly suggest thatNrg1 andNrg2 are regulatory genes which specifically mediate the negative control exerted by ammonium on the nitrate assimilation pathway inC. reinhardtii.  相似文献   

19.
20.
In Chlamydomonas reinhardtii mutants defective at the structural locus for nitrate reductase (nit-1) or at loci for biosynthesis of the molybdopterin cofactor (nit-3, nit-4, or nit-5 and nit-6), both nitrite uptake and nitrite reductase activities were repressed in ammonium-grown cells and expressed at high amounts in nitrogen-free media or in media containing nitrate or nitrite. In contrast, wild-type cells required nitrate induction for expression of high levels of both activities. In mutants defective at the regulatory locus for nitrate reductase (nit-2), very low levels of nitrite uptake and nitrite reductase activities were expressed even in the presence of nitrate or nitrite. Both restoration of nitrate reductase activity in mutants defective at nit-1, nit-3, and nit-4 by isolating diploid strains among them and transformation of a structural mutant upon integration of the wild-type nit-1 gene gave rise to the wild-type expression pattern for nitrite uptake and nitrite reductase activities. Conversely, inactivation of nitrate reductase by tungstate treatment in nitrate, nitrite, or nitrogen-free media made wild-type cells respond like nitrate reductase-deficient mutants with respect to the expression of nitrite uptake and nitrite reductase activities. Our results indicate that nit-2 is a regulatory locus for both the nitrite uptake system and nitrite reductase, and that the nitrate reductase enzyme plays an important role in the regulation of the expression of both enzyme activities.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号